Hello MARMAM,

On behalf of my co-authors, I am pleased to announce our new publication:

Merrill GB, Testa JW, Burns JM (2021) Maternal foraging trip duration as a 
population-level index of foraging and reproductive success for the northern 
fur seal. Mar Ecol Prog Ser 666:217-229. https://doi.org/10.3354/meps13694

ABSTRACT: The duration of maternal foraging trips has been regarded as an 
indicator of foraging conditions in many marine mammals, including northern fur 
seals Callorhinus ursinus (NFS). However, previous work has focused on 
individual variation, was conducted during limited portions of the lactation 
period, and/or reached conclusions based on relatively small sample sizes. 
Here, we build upon the substantial foundations of this previous work to 
establish maternal foraging trip duration (MFTD) as an index of foraging 
success at the rookery level. We found that a 1 d increase in rookery-averaged 
MFTD corresponded to a 6.52% reduction in the average mass of female pups. 
Furthermore, rookery-averaged MFTD increased by 0.34 d per 1°C increase in 
average ocean bottom temperature. The magnitude of variation observed in both 
MFTD and pup mass is likely too small to help explain the general decline in 
population size seen over recent decades. However, the correlation between 
rookery-averaged MFTD and pup mass highlights the potential power of the MFTD 
index to detect bottom-up effects on pup growth, a likely indicator of 
survival. Furthermore, when compared with concurrently conducted studies on 
prey distribution, availability, and quality, the relationship between MFTD and 
bottom temperature suggests a northward shift in distribution of NFS preferred 
prey, walleye pollock Gadus chalcogrammus, that is associated with an increase 
in trip duration across the study period. Thus, rookery-averaged MFTD is a 
promising metric for tracking broad environmental changes, such as northerly 
shifts in the Eastern Bering Sea cold pool.

Best,
Greg

Greg Merrill, M.S.

Duke University
Nowacek Laboratory
NSF Graduate Research Fellow
University Program in Ecology
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